Swiss Boost Humanitarian Aid to Yemen

Local Editor

The Swiss foreign ministry has announced it is making additional funds available to cover the most urgent humanitarian needs in Yemen. It calls for a political solution to the conflict in the war-torn country.

The CHF3 million ($2.9 million) financial commitment over the next 12 months is destined for a fund managed by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

It will be used to pay for emergency water and hygiene projects as well as for food aid, according to foreign ministry statement published on Friday.

Switzerland has sent an expert to the region to train the UN and local authorities on how to contain the cholera disease.

An estimated seven million are suffering from acute malnutrition and 20 million people have no access to clean water in Yemen, while the country has taken in nearly 300,000 refugees from Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea in recent years.

"With every passing day of war, the suffering of the population increases," the statement warned.

The foreign ministry urged all parties to the conflict to respect human rights and international humanitarian law. "A political solution to the situation in Yemen is needed to ensure a lasting peace," it said.

Switzerland has been active in Yemen since 2007 with an aid budget of CHF9 million per year. Its humanitarian program currently focuses on water and sanitation as well as projects to protect the civilian population, according to the foreign ministry.

Saudi Arabia has come under international opprobrium for the sheer size of the casualties from the war it is leading since March 2015 to crush the Houthi Ansarullah movement and bring back the former Yemeni government to power.

The offensive has so far killed 11,400 amid countless reports suggesting deliberate and indiscriminate targeting of civilian infrastructure by Saudi jets and mercenaries.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by Website Team